Roberto Ragusa wrote:
Seann Clark wrote:
I am looking for a little help on finding out the best way to do
this. I had a 4 disk 1.4TB RAID 5 array, and extended that to an 8 disk
3.18TB array, on a 64 bit system.The Raid card handled the migration of
the disks well, and everything on that side is up and running as it
should. Problem is I don't know how to extend LVM to a larger size,
without doing the whole adding of physical drives, and so forth, and the
pv display doesn't show more than the 1.4TB that I started with. Most
documentation details software RAID procedures that don't really work
with this. I figure I am doing something(lots of things) wrong.
Have a look at the thread called "lvm resizing and shifting" (23/8/2008).
The issue is similar and my proposal worked in that case.
Your problem is that you have a 3TB disk (sdb) containing just
a 1.4TB partition (sdb1, which is your pv).
I will check out that thread, that should be pretty interesting of a
read, I had to have missed it when I was reviewing the list email.
I obviously have to recommend to be very careful when doing these
operations. You have a backup of your data, right?
I don't have a backup for this server right now, so I will be getting
that ready to start working (I hope) on this system. My problem is that
I have 1.2TB of this filled.
I'm also a bit concerned about the fact that you will break the 2TB
per partition barrier; I don't know if that limit has been totally
removed nowadays.
Is the 2TB issue still in place for ext3 filesystems in 64bit? I am not
sure, I don't really see mention of this so I might have missed it. If
that is the case, I will just set my controller to autocarve and set up
two partitions for this.It shouldn't be a problem with the hardware RAID
Alternatively, you can add a sdb2 and then pvcreate, vgextend, lvextend.
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] 20971519 512-byte
hardware sectors (10737 MB)
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled,
read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] 20971519 512-byte
hardware sectors (10737 MB)
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled,
read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sda: sda1 sda2
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Attached SCSI disk
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Very big device. Trying
to use READ CAPACITY(16).
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] 6814820353 512-byte
hardware sectors (3489188 MB)
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Write Protect is off
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Write cache: enabled,
read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Very big device. Trying
to use READ CAPACITY(16).
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] 6814820353 512-byte
hardware sectors (3489188 MB)
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Write Protect is off
Oct 9 11:58:39 haruhi kernel: sd 0:0:0:1: [sdb] Write cache: enabled,
read cache: disabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
The important information is just the line you have not included
(sdb: sdb1, sdb2?).
What about /proc/partitions?
The drive in question is sdb(1)
What is in /proc/partitions:
major minor #blocks name
8 0 10485759 sda
8 1 200781 sda1
8 2 10281600 sda2
8 16 3407410176 sdb
8 17 1454324256 sdb1
253 0 1462468608 dm-0
253 1 2031616 dm-1
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